In late June, Senate Republicans unveiled a deeply regressive and unpopular health care plan, and Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.) — the only GOP senator up for re-election next year in a state Hillary Clinton won — adopted a bold posture, rejecting his party’s plans.
Indeed, the Nevada Republican made quite a spectacle of his opposition to the GOP legislation, hosting a press conference alongside Gov. Brian Sandoval (R) to denounce his party’s blueprint in no uncertain terms.
But in the days and weeks that followed, Heller started feeling intense pressure from the right, and the senator’s posture on health care started to buckle. GOP insiders went so far as to say that Heller could be “bought off.”
When it came time to start casting votes on the Senate floor last week, Heller balked at his party’s “repeal and delay” gambit, but he locked arms with 48 other Republicans and voted for the GOP’s “skinny repeal” plan — which ultimately failed. The Huffington Post‘s headline rang true: “What The Hell Was Dean Heller Thinking?”
Sen. Dean Heller blew it.









